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#People

Your Donations Keep Cogmap Going

Why Donate?

Cogmap has no revenue model. We rely on individual donations to make information that has traditionally been closely held available to all. We do not want people paying for access to this information. That is simply not how we roll.

Can I expense this?

I would. This seems like a business expense to me. We will give you a fancy receipt and everything.

How much should I donate?

That is a matter of personal preference. For reference, Wikipedia tries to get people to donate $100.

Where does the money go?

Cogmap is mostly one person. Your donation will allow me to upgrade from $0.12 ramen noodles to the $0.38 ramen! Woot! Alternately, your money funds people and technology to improve the sweetness of Cogmap. There is no shortage of innovative ideas we have for improving the site.

Why not just raise venture capital?

Venture capital puts a ticking time bomb on the business. We have to spend their money to build a revenue stream by a certain date. We don't want this web site to have expenses and require revenue, particularly at the kind of scale required by investors. By maintaining our independence, we can keep our burn low and ensure that Cogmap is available forever. If it is never a business, it can never go "out of business".

Is there anything in it for me?

We will send you "removeable laptop stickers", the bleeding edge of sticker technology.

If you make a donation larger than $100 (and you are in the continental U.S.), we start sending you Cogmugs, used every morning by Cogmap crew members. The best way to signal that you are part of the elite digerati.

A donation over $250 adds a Cogmap t-shirt, worn exclusively by the development team. Ask anyone, Cogmap schwag is the best.

Also, with every donation, you will get to give us "A++" priority feature input. Your features go to the top of the queue.

Finally and best of all, being a friend of Cogmap makes you smarter and better looking.

Why does the Paypal page mention Deconstruct Media?

What can I tell you, I have a lot going on. Don't worry, it's all good.